Exalted Magic the Gathering

What exactly is Exalted?

It is a triggered ability that actually works for animals that attack alone. When you yourself have an animal with exalted, after that any creature which you control that assaults alone are certain to get +1/+1 before end of change.

Anytime a creature you control attacks alone, count the amount of cases of exalted among permanents you control. After those abilities resolve, which is exactly how many times the creature gets +1/+1. In good sized quantities, exalted is very lethal, since an individual creature will receive numerous bonuses for attacking alone, while leaving the remainder untapped and in a position to guard.

Instance

Tom starts their hand with two flatlands, one woodland, one Island, Akrasan Squire, Rafiq of the Many, and Finest Hour.

Tom deals 2 damage because Akrasan Squire, a 1/1 creature, assaulted alone, offering it self some great benefits of its Exalted capability, which results in an extra +1/+1.

Tom's hand now could be: One Plains, one woodland, one Island, Rafiq of the Many, and best hr.

Third turn, he attracts another Akrasan Squire, plays their woodland, puts the Akrasan Squire on the battleground, and assaults because of the Akrasan Squire alone for 3 damage. (the next Squire card provided an additional +1/+1 for an overall total of +2/+2 if a creature attacks alone).

Fourth Turn, he attracts an Island, plays an Island, plays Rafiq of the Many, and assaults with one Akrasan Squire, performing 8 harm. (Totaling +3/+3 for a lone attacking animal, plus its initial power, increased by 2 as a consequence of Rafiq of many's caused Double Strike capability.)

Assuming Tom's adversary has chosen to not stop for almost any change, Tom's opponent is at 7 wellness.

702.82. Exalted

702.82a Exalted is a triggered ability. “Exalted” means “Anytime a creature you control assaults alone, that creature gets +1/+1 until end of turn.”

702.82b a creature “attacks alone” if it's the actual only real creature stated as an assailant in certain combat period. See guideline 506.5.